The Newspaper Readership Project (1977-1983) was an
unprecedented cooperative attempt by the American newspaper
industry to halt the downward trend in readership and circulation.
The Project had an enormous impact on American newspapers; it
spurred such changes in their content as special sections and new
graphics, and led to important innovations in distribution and
promotion. Leo Bogart was a central figure in the conception and
execution of the Project, so his account is truly an insider's view
of the interplay of the Project and the people involved in it.
"Preserving the Press: How Daily Newspapers Mobilized to Keep
Their Readers" is an insider account that vividly describes the
personalities, organizations, and policy debates of the American
daily newspaper business at a critical moment in its history.
Exciting and informative, it shows how this major American
institution confronted the great social and technological changes
that threatened its established position.
Bogart demonstrates the difficulties of translating research
findings into actual changes in practice, reviews controversies
over the Project's promotional efforts, and reports on dramatic
changes that occurred in newspaper distribution methods.
General
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